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Eddie Murphy Documentary's Biggest Revelations
Music

Eddie Murphy Documentary’s Biggest Revelations

by jummy84 November 12, 2025
written by jummy84

The documentary Being Eddie isn’t a totally exhaustive portrait of Eddie Murphy, but for the generations who have been entertained by him since he exploded into stardom, it offers a lot of fascinating insight into who he is as a person. Says Murphy, at one point, “My biggest blessing is not my comedic talent — my biggest blessing is that I love myself and I knew what I wanted to do really, really early. That’s why I didn’t fall into any traps or anything. Because at the root of it all, I loved myself.”

In extended interviews with Murphy as well as collaborators including Jerry Seinfeld, Dave Chappelle, Arsenio Hall, Pete Davidson, and more, director Angus Wall explores a lot of fascinating topics with the multi-hyphenate, including the wild stories he has after spending 40 years in the spotlight. There’s also, appropriately enough given the title, a lot of musing on how he sees himself as a performer: “I’m not a stand-up comedian. I’m funny, but I don’t go, ‘I’m a comedian,’ like I don’t go ‘I’m an actor’ or ‘I’m a musician.’ I’m an artist that can express himself a bunch of different ways. Sensitivity is the gauge, not how much talent you have. The most sensitive one will be the artist that’s most in tune.”

He then laughs. “I don’t want to get too artsy. I could get really artsy if you let me.”

Below, find 15 of the biggest revelations to come from Being Eddie about Murphy’s career and life, from his earliest days to his current outlook on family, death, and cats. There’s also a wild Yul Brynner story, and some shockingly highbrow context for his love of MTV’s Ridiculousness.


Eddie Murphy’s First “Showbiz Thing” Was a Ventriloquist’s Dummy

Being Eddie (Netflix)

Related Video

The Willie Talk dummy he says he received at a young age was a relatively basic puppet: “Willie Talk’s eyes didn’t move. His mouth just moved.” However, Murphy points out, it reveals that even at a young age, he was very interested in exploring the possibilities of playing multiple characters at once.

Later in the documentary, he reveals an idea for a stand-up bit where he’d have Bill Cosby and Richard Pryor marionettes having a conversation, with him sitting between them. “I’d get at least 10 good minutes of jokes out of it,” he adds, and at the end of the movie we actually do get to see that in action: Murphy playing with his Cosby and Pryor puppets, having a laugh.

Eddie Murphy’s Birth Father Was Murdered When He Was Young

Murphy doesn’t share a lot of happy recollections about the time when his parents were together, sharing that “my very first memory is my mother and father fighting — she threw the Virgin Mary at him.” His father died when he was eight years old, and while Murphy doesn’t know all the details, he believes his father was killed by another woman in a “lover’s quarrel.”

Despite the early loss of his father, Murphy does speak fondly about his stepfather Vernon Lynch, “a solid father figure for the rest of my life.”

Eddie Murphy Has a Photo of Himself Punching Muhammad Ali in the Face

Early into the documentary, Murphy’s going through some memorabilia, which leads him to share the memory of punching the iconic boxer in the face one night. “Ali could talk some shit, and every now and then, Ali be talking too much shit,” is what he shares about that incident.

He does go on to call Ali “my hero,” noting that there was “nobody like Muhammad Ali in American history. He looked like he was plugged into the wall — he had this light. He stood up to the government, stood up for what he felt was right.”

The Co-Founder of Quibi Is Responsible for Eddie Murphy’s Movie Stardom

Yes, it was famed producer and studio exec Jeffrey Katzenberg who, while president of production at Paramount, took a chance on Murphy as the star of 48 Hours, his first major role. “The first two weeks of 48 Hours, they wanted to fire me because they were like ‘this isn’t working,’” Murphy says. “And [Katzenberg] came to them like ‘No, don’t fire him, there’s something there’ and they didn’t fire me. and we’ve just been cool since.”

At that point, Murphy says, he “wasn’t thinking I was going to be a movie star.” His belief is that “my stuff took off the way it took off because they’d never seen a young Black person go take charge in the white world.”

Katzenberg made a multi-picture deal with Murphy when he was just 19, and one unexpected benefit of becoming a huge star at that time: Murphy found himself meeting a slew of major Hollywood legends, who were curious enough about him to ask him to lunch. “I met Brando and Charlton Heston, Sinatra — I met all those guys through them calling my agent,” Murphy says.

Everyone Has Been Misinterpreting This One Moment in Beverly Hills Cop for Decades

In an interview, film critic Elvis Mitchell talks about the moment from the 1984 movie where Murphy’s character, Axel Foley, walks by two men wearing leather outfits very similar to his infamous Raw jumpsuit. As Axel passes, he’s seen laughing at them, something Mitchell calls out as a “complex moment in pop culture” — Murphy laughing at himself.

Murphy, meanwhile, would like to re-contextualize that scene now: “Eddie Murphy’s laughing at Eddie Murphy? No, one of those guys… as he walked past, he made a weird face. I was laughing at the face he made.” The way the shot is set up, you can’t see the faces of the men walking away, so we only have Murphy’s word to go on here, but he seems reliable enough.

Eddie Murphy Is Straight-Edge

Murphy reveals that as hard as he might have partied in his youth — “nobody had as much fun as we had in the ’80s” — none of that fun was substance-based. “I’ve never even tried cocaine or touched cocaine or shit like that. I don’t drink, I don’t smoke cigarettes. I was 30 years old when I first smoked a joint.”

And of course he had opportunities to indulge. One story he shares involves him going to a blues bar at the age of 19 with John Belushi and Robin Williams. “They put some blow on a table, and I’m standing there with, you know, two heroes. And I wasn’t even curious. I was just not with it.”

Says Jamie Foxx in an interview, “He’s very introverted. [At a party], he’ll sit in the back of the room with a Coca-Cola.”

Eddie Murphy Has Yul Brynner-Related Regrets

Murphy held his 21st birthday party at the famous New York club Studio 54, and Yul Brynner, star of movies including The King and I, The Magnificent Seven, and Westworld, was also at the club that night with his wife. Brynner, at one point in the evening, asked Murphy, “How would you like to go back to my apartment with my wife and I and party?”

Only later did Murphy realize… “Did he want me to go fuck his wife? Now, I wish I would have went. The story would end better if, you know, ‘Yeah, I went back to Yul Brynner’s spot and fucked his wife and he was watching me fucking, going “et cetera et cetera”…’” The documentary punctuates that moment with a clip of Brynner from The King and I, repeating that famous line.

November 12, 2025 0 comments
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Even Ryan Murphy Hates His Own Horror Show
TV & Streaming

Even Ryan Murphy Hates His Own Horror Show

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

‘How Dare You Watch Serial Killer Shows,’ Says Serial Killer Show

Ian Brennan’s latest attempt to humanize a notorious serial killer — this time with Charlie Hunnam provoking pity for ‘the Butcher of Plainfield’ — insists the only reason such nauseating horror shows exist at all is because of the people watching, aka the real sickos.

October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Cillian Murphy is a Teacher of Troubled Students in 'Steve' Trailer #2
Hollywood

Cillian Murphy is a Teacher of Troubled Students in ‘Steve’ Trailer #2

by jummy84 October 4, 2025
written by jummy84

Cillian Murphy is a Teacher of Troubled Students in ‘Steve’ Trailer #2

by Alex Billington
October 3, 2025
Source: YouTube

“You’re not alone, Shy… That’s the whole point.” Netflix has debuted one more final official trailer for the film titled Steve, from the same Belgian filmmaker, Tim Mielants, behind Cillian’s last film Small Things Like These. Steve is now playing on Netflix as of today (view it here) – after premiering at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival last month to mostly positive reviews. The film follows the headteacher Steve battling for his reform college’s survival while managing his mental health & other challenges. Concurrently, the troubled student Shy navigates his violent tendencies and fragility, torn between his past and his future prospects. Cillian Murphy stars as the titular teacher Steve, with a cast including Tracey Ullman, Jay Lycurgo, Simbi Ajikawo, Emily Watson, Douggie McMeekin, Youssef Kerkour, Luke Ayres, Joshua J Parker, Araloyin Oshunremi, Tut Nyuot, Tom Moya, Ahmed Ismail, Joshua Barry, and others. The film features music by Ben Salisbury & Geoff Barrow. Adapted from Max Porter’s book “Shy”: a story “about guilt, rage, imagination, & boyhood, about being lost in the dark and learning you’re not alone.” This is a much better trailer and really makes me want to watch this. A compassionate, honest film. Worth a look.

Here’s the second official trailer (+ poster) for Tim Mielants’ film Steve, direct from Netflix’s YouTube:

Steve Trailer Poster

Steve Trailer Poster

You can rewatch the first official trailer for Tim Mielants’ Steve movie right here for even more footage.

Set in the mid-90s, Steve is a reimagining of Max Porter’s bestseller Shy. The film follows a pivotal day in the life of headteacher Steve (Academy Award winner Cillian Murphy) and his students at a last-chance reform school amidst a world that has forsaken them. As Steve fights to protect the school’s integrity and impending closure, we witness him grappling with his own mental health. In parallel to Steve’s struggles, we meet Shy (Jay Lycurgo), a troubled teen caught between his past and what lies ahead as he tries to reconcile his inner fragility with his impulse for self-destruction and violence. Steve is directed by Belgian filmmaker Tim Mielants, director of the films Patrick Will, and Small Things Like These previously, plus short films & TV work including episode of “Legion”, “Tales from the Loop” and “The Responder” recently. The screenplay is written by Max Porter, adapted from his own bestselling novel titled “Shy”. It’s produced by Alan Moloney, Cillian Murphy, and Tina Pawlik. This will premiere at the 2025 Toronto Film Festival this fall. Netflix will then debut Meilants’ Steve film opening in select US theaters on September 19th, 2025, then streaming on Netflix starting October 3rd coming up this fall. Look any good? Who wants to watch?

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October 4, 2025 0 comments
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Ryan Murphy on Menendez Parole, Luigi Mangione and Monster
TV & Streaming

Ryan Murphy on Menendez Parole, Luigi Mangione and Monster

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

Few shows over the past few years can be said to have had as much impact as Netflix’s “Monster.”

In interviews for a Variety cover story about Charlie Hunnam, the star of show’s new season about serial killer Ed Gein, “Monster” co-creators Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan reflected on the phenomenon of the second season about Erik and Lyle Menendez. As that installment blew up in fall 2024, a new generation of viewers discovered the Menendezes’ story, including their claims that their parents, whom they were convicted of killing, had abused them. Both Menendez brothers remain in prison after having been denied parole in August of this year, and, in September, a judge denied their petition for a new trial. Even still, the calls for them to be released have grown deafening — including from Murphy himself.

“I do wish they had been paroled,” says Murphy, “and when I started working on it, I thought the complete opposite. I thought, Nope, kill your parents, stay in jail.” Continuing to consider their case has shifted Murphy’s thinking. “I feel this about the prison system in general: What good does it do to keep people just sitting in jail? They could get out of prison and do something constructive with their lives. I don’t agree with the parole board that they’re a danger to their community — I don’t think that’s true.” 

Co-creator Brennan was similarly dismayed that the Menendezes remain incarcerated. “I was surprised, and I was sad, even though my feelings about them are completely mixed,” he says. “I really thought it was going to go there because of this groundswell — people returning to that story 30 years later with a different set of cultural priors.” (Brennan notes that male sexual abuse, which the Menendezes say they suffered at home, is better understood today.) 

“The state of California has no interest in keeping them behind bars at this point,” Brennan continues. “That verges on a kind of cruelty that I don’t quite understand.” 

Brennan takes care to note that he has never interacted with the brothers, and the Menendezes, at first, were put out by what they understood to be the show’s depiction of them. Erik Menendez issued a statement from prison, when the season of “Monster” about his family debuted, declaring that the show was “rooted in horrible and blatant lies” and “disheartening slander.” Months later, though, Lyle credited the show with “shining a light” on their story and said he and his brother were “grateful.” Murphy wasn’t surprised.

“We’ve always felt wildly misunderstood about this show, from day one,” Murphy says. The Jeffrey Dahmer season, he says, was intended to be about father-son relationships and about social justice, as epitomized by Niecy Nash-Betts’s character. “That was the beating heart of the show. When the show came out, nobody wrote about that at all,” he says. “It was just a constant stream of ‘How dare they, it’s so exploitative.’ I found the same thing with ‘Menendez.’ The show had aired for three days, and Erik Menendez and his wife were speaking out against the show, although he would later come out and say ‘I was wrong, it really did help us.’ I found that interesting.” 

The Gein season, like the Dahmer and Menendez seasons before it, sets out to, as Murphy says, “provoke the question” — in this case, to address the roots of America’s ongoing mental-health crisis through the story of a high-profile sufferer of mental illness. Those kind of stories are what fuel the show’s run; other stories, Murphy and Brennan say, they’ve ruled out. 

John Wayne Gacy, Brennan says, has “nothing redemptive” in his story: “The second the name comes up for us, every year, both of us go, No. There’s no pathos.” The Golden State Killer has a similar chilling effect on brainstorming. And Ted Bundy sparks nothing in Murphy: “When you look at those crimes,” he asks rhetorically, “what are the themes there? It doesn’t ask you any questions about society. It feels too murderous — not interesting enough.”

Other stories just aren’t ready yet. “We have a ‘maybe one day’ file,” Murphy says, noting that he’s considered a “Monster” season about Luigi Mangione, the accused killer of UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, but deemed it too early in the narrative to proceed. “We know nothing about him,” he says. “There was nothing to write — we didn’t have information yet. Maybe something will come out in the trial.” 

Beyond Gein, the pair are already preparing a fourth season, which will feature Ella Beatty as purported axe murderer Lizzie Borden. “It’s a female ‘Monster’ season,” Murphy says. “It talks not just about Lizzie, but other infamous women who were branded as monsters.” (He cites Countess Elizabeth Báthory, a Hungarian noble accused of torture and murder at the turn of the 17th century, and Aileen Wuornos, executed for serial murder in 2002.) “There’s many different monsters that float through the season. This has the same approach: Profiling famous women who have been labeled as one thing, and we ask the question: Really, do you think so?”

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Is Donna Murphy Leaving 'Brilliant Minds'? Boss Explains Muriel's Decision, Talks Wolf and Josh Romance (Exclusive)
TV & Streaming

Is Donna Murphy Leaving ‘Brilliant Minds’? Boss Explains Muriel’s Decision, Talks Wolf and Josh Romance (Exclusive)

by jummy84 September 30, 2025
written by jummy84

[Warning: The below contains MAJOR spoilers for Brilliant Minds Season 2 Episode 2 “The Contestant.”]

Brilliant Minds isn’t about to say goodbye to Donna Murphy, right?! Especially not so soon after Wolf’s (Zachary Quinto) father left? Muriel does step down as CMO in the latest episode, but she and Wolf also discuss that now she’ll just be his mom, not his boss. That should make for some good television since those two are so great in scenes together.

Also in “The Contestant,” Carol (Tamberla Perry) successfully fights for her job, helped by Muriel, saying she told her to keep treating Alison, the woman with whom her husband was having the affair. Plus, it looks like Wolf and Josh (Teddy Sears) will be getting back on track when they go out for drinks, but then the latter pulls away when the former kisses him. He can be his friend, but that’s it, for now. And a new flashforward reveals that Carol is at Wolf’s side when he signs himself into Amelia’s (Bellamy Young) Hudson Oaks psychiatric facility.

Below, showrunner Michael Grassi breaks down this episode, reveals if Donna Murphy is going anywhere, talks Wolf and Josh’s moment, offers more information about the flashforwards, and much more.

Muriel steps down as CMO. Is Donna still a series regular?

Michael Grassi: Donna is still very much a part of the show, and we’ll be seeing more of her very soon.

I feel like that means we’ll be getting a lot more of the mother-son relationship. But can she step away from the hospital when her son works there as much as she should?

Good question. So, we’ll definitely be seeing more of Muriel in the first half of the season and even later, but I think that relationship is going to shift a little. But I think we’ve seen so much growth in the Wolf-Muriel relationship, and I love Zach and Donna on screen together so much. Some of my favorite scenes are them. We’ve seen them grow, and we’ve seen Wolf appreciate everything his mother did and even though it might’ve been hard for him growing up the way his mother was, sometimes I think he sees that she was really trying to protect him and that it wasn’t even that she wanted to keep what dad did a secret, but it was what dad wanted and she was just trying to protect him in so many ways. And I think Wolf really sees that for the first time, and we see their relationship evolve, and you’re so right that post 202, we’re going to see a bit of a shift. It’s like, what does it look like when Muriel isn’t at Bronx General and when she catches up with her son? That new dynamic of just mother and not boss is something we haven’t gotten to see yet really on the show since he was a kid in the flashback. So, it’s going to be really fun.

When you said seeing the growth, I just thought about when he checked on her after hearing the end of her phone conversation. A moment like that at the beginning of the series almost would’ve been impossible to imagine.

Yeah, and I have to say, too, I love Tamberla and Donna together as well. That’s one of my favorite scenes in 202. I love it. It is just so good, and I love the mutual respect they have, and they have so much in common, but also, Wolf is their main thing in common. They also just love him so much, and he’s such a big part of their lives, so it’s just nice to see that connective tissue between them.

Yeah, then Muriel has that line that Wolf is going to need Carol, and the flashforward in this episode shows he does, with Carol by his side. So, are the flash forwards going to be a bit disjointed like that, where that one clearly took place before the premieres? Should we expect that, and then it’s going to be piecing it all together?

 Correct. I think it’s going to be a bit of a puzzle that the audience is going to be putting together for sure. We’re going to see different parts of what those flashforwards are, jumping in time a little bit.

With these first two episodes, it’s easier to tell, but will there be moments where it’s questionable when something took place?

I don’t want to spoil it too much. You’ll see.

What can you say about the new CMO and that person’s dynamic with Oliver? He’s adjusting to someone who’s going to be his boss, who’s not his mom?

Yeah, I would say stay tuned.

The good news is Carol is back. First of all, thank you so much for the Carol and Josh scenes in this episode. They were great,

They’re so good together.

Pief Weyman/NBC

But there is now the question of who reported her, since it appears it wasn’t Alison. Can you confirm it wasn’t Alison? Because she could have reported her and still decided to speak up on her behalf.

I can confirm it wasn’t Alison. She went in and she told them that Carol saved her life and she meant it.

How is Carol going to go about trying to get that answer?

I think Carol’s going to be torn about the ethics of getting that answer. And is it something that she even should do because whoever reported her, was it their right to report her? So, I think we’re going to see Carol be tested a little bit throughout the season, and that question will loom and it will weigh on her. She has to be at work, and somebody around her reported her for this. We’re going to see how Dr. Carol Pierce navigates something like that as a psychiatrist, which is going to be great.

Is she going to be changing her approach to work at all because of what she just went through?

That’s something we’re going to continue to explore in Episode 203, which I’m so excited for you to see.

Oliver kisses Josh, trying to just get things back to where they were before Noah showed up. But I can’t help but think about Oliver not returning his “I’m falling for you” and you telling me that he would in his own unique way, which he hasn’t yet. So, does that play into where Oliver is when it comes to being ready to resume that relationship?

I think when Wolf kisses Josh in 202, it’s a bit of a moment where he’s trying to reset, but it’s also that he’s doing it in the wrong way because it’s like, “We haven’t even had the conversation, and you’re kissing me at drinks.” And Josh literally thought, “Oh, he’s asking me to drinks to be like, ‘Hey, I have to talk to you. My dad left again. It’s messed up.’” It’s just a little bit cart before the horse, and I think it’s just part of Wolf trying to cope with what happened, and it’s Josh being like, “Oh, this is messy.” And I think it further complicates things to be honest.

Josh says he can be his friend. Why did you want to slow them down, and what can you say about any hope for their romance after 202?

I think they had a bit of a quick start. I think they shot out of the can a little bit. I think they had that amazing kiss in Episode 107 last season, but it might’ve been premature. And I think ever since that kiss, they’ve been trying to navigate, “Who are we to each other? We clearly have feelings for each other. We also work together and disagree in a lot of stuff. And that’s really complicated.” And then Wolf did what he did in 113 because he was dealing with personal stuff and I think they have a lot to figure out and it’s going to be a ride between them. But I really do think that there’s love there and mutual respect, and I think we see that on screen between the two of them. I think Zach and Teddy are so good, and those are some of my favorite scenes. Their dynamic is going to shift in a big way very soon.

Zachary Quinto as Dr. Oliver Wolf, Teddy Sears as Dr. Josh Nichols — 'Brilliant Minds' Season 2 Episode 2 "The Contestant"

Pief Weyman/NBC

I might be getting a bit dark with this question, but Ericka (Ashleigh LaThrop) sleeps through her phone going off about the patient and Charlie (Brian Altemus) has that comment about taking it easy on the benzos. Did he dose her or is it just that he knows that she’s taking pills?

He knows that she’s taking pills. He saw her take pills.

So it was just that, we shouldn’t be wondering how far this guy’s going to go?

No, no, no, no, no. I love that you asked that though. That’s a whole other show. Maybe Season 3, maybe Season 3.

Are there any episodes coming up like the building collapse from Season 1?

We have some really dramatic cases this season. I’ll tease Episode 203 has an opening sequence that is one of my worst nightmares, and I think a lot of people’s worst nightmares. So I’m excited for people to see that. And we will have some bigger episodes this season for sure. And some unexpected events happen.

Brilliant Minds, Mondays, 10/9c, NBC

September 30, 2025 0 comments
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Steve review: Cillian Murphy is in awards-worthy form in powerful film
TV & Streaming

Steve review: Cillian Murphy is in awards-worthy form in powerful film

by jummy84 September 17, 2025
written by jummy84

The pupils’ struggles are mirrored by Steve’s own; a driven educator cum social worker, escalating alcohol and substance abuse enabling him to keep numerous plates spinning while all around him falls apart.

Thus, the scene is set for a pivotal 24 hours during which the pressure-cooker environment is tested to its limits, in a powerful film where dark humour only partially masks a desperate state of affairs, distinguished by across-the-board memorable performances.

It’s an especially frantic day at Stanton Wood, on which a camera crew filming a short piece for a regional TV news programme coincides with a visit from the area’s pompous, knighted MP (a requisitely stuffy Roger Allam).

Cillian Murphy as Steve in Netflix’s Steve. Robert Viglasky/Netflix

Most significantly, though, representatives of the trust that bankrolls the project arrive to inform Steve and his staff that the buildings have been sold and the school will close in six months.

Director Tim Mielants drops that particular bombshell fairly early on, by which time he’s already skilfully established his characters, from the mayhem of Steve on what he calls “a roundabout of doom” and the equally well-meaning but more pragmatic Ullman, to the arguably unsung stars of the piece, the boys themselves.

Prominent among the miscreants is the troubled but clearly bright Shy, a mannered, captivating turn by Jay Lycurgo (screenwriter Max Porter’s own source novel was called Shy), who we first meet in a happy-go-lucky mood until a phone call from his mother reveals she no longer wants anything to do with him.

Shy’s individual collision course is punctuated by pocket portraits of his fellow students (quick-witted bully Luke Ayres and maniacal Joshua J Parker make strong impressions), often presented as straight-to-camera interviews being filmed by the TV crew – heartfelt and hilarious in equal measure.

Difficult and destructive influences they may be, but as Ullman says of the misfits in her charge, “I f***ing adore all of them.”

Jay Lycurgo as Shy, Simbiatu Ajikawo (Little Simz) as Shola in Steve. Cr. Robert Viglasky/Neflix © 2025

Jay Lycurgo as Shy, Simbiatu Ajikawo (Little Simz) as Shola in Steve. Cr. Robert Viglasky/Neflix © 2025

The scholastic/babysitting efforts of Murphy and Ullman are accompanied by integral support from nervous rookie teacher Simbi Ajikawo (aka rapper Little Simz) and Emily Watson as a (mostly) tranquil counsellor, comprising a fully-rounded cast that might suggest the film is an ensemble work more in keeping with the original book.

However, Murphy’s star power and undeniable charisma can’t help but dominate events, and it’s almost exclusively through him that we see Stanton Wood unravel at the start of its careening towards a grimly uncertain future.

He’s in awards-worthy form, those bright expressive eyes piercing through a flustered, dishevelled frame as his commitment to the kids never wavers, despite sombre upheavals in his life away from the school that are drip-fed to viewers with stylish understatement.

It’s high drama throughout and not always comfortable viewing, but Mielants and Porter use their canvas to shine a light on broader issues of social and educational systemic failure without once stumbling into preachiness.

This is responsible, intelligent film-making, more important and questioning than boarder dramas like the Oscar-winning The Holdovers and wisely side-stepping the shock value controversies of, say, 1979’s Scum.

Mielants is to be applauded for making his audience warm to a ragbag collection of ne’er-do-wells they might normally cross the street to avoid, and in Murphy’s title character he has helped fashion a poster child for underpaid, under-resourced workers navigating the obstacles that threaten the jobs they care passionately about.

One scene in particular, close to the conclusion of the film, reinforces the bond which inevitably forms between teachers and pupils; a dialogue-free snapshot that moistens the eyes to temporarily dilute the anger built up over the previous hour about the callous treatment by those in power towards a near forgotten underclass.

Steve will be released in select UK cinemas on Friday 19th September and on Netflix on Friday 3rd October.

Check out more of our Film coverage or visit our TV Guide and Streaming Guide to find out what’s on. For more TV recommendations and reviews, listen to The Radio Times Podcast.

September 17, 2025 0 comments
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BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - MAY 13: Hayes Warner attends the 2025 BMI Pop Awards at Beverly Wilshire, A Four Seasons Hotel on May 13, 2025 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Kevin Winter/Getty Images)
TV & Streaming

Cast, Premiere Date, More Details on Ryan Murphy FX Series

by jummy84 August 23, 2025
written by jummy84

Ryan Murphy is about to take us back to 1980s Los Angeles. The TV producer mogul is adapting Bret Easton Ellis’ psychological horror novel The Shards, and he’s assembled quite the cast.

The Shards, which was released in 2021, is loosely inspired by the American Psycho author’s own life growing up. A TV adaptation initially started out at HBO, but those plans fell through. Now, Murphy has taken The Shards over to FX.

On July 16, key cast members were revealed. Who is playing the fictional version of Bret Easton Ellis? What about the mysterious Robert Mallory? TV Insider is breaking down all the updates about The Shards TV series.

When is The Shards coming out?

The Shards doesn’t have a premiere date yet. We first heard about the show’s move to FX back in May. Given the casting news, production will likely get underway this year. The earliest The Shards would premiere is 2026.

Who has been cast in The Shards?

Igby Rigney has been cast as a young Bret Easton Ellis in The Shards, per Variety. Rigney is best known for his roles in the Mike Flanagan TV universe, including Midnight Mass, The Fall of the House of Usher, and The Midnight Club.

Homer James Jigme Gere will play Robert Mallory, the new kid at the posh Buckley prep school that Bret attends. The 25-year-old is the son of Richard Gere. The Shards will mark his first major role.

In a Ryan Murphy-style twist, the young Gere will star alongside Kaia Gerber in The Shards. Gerber is attached to star in the series, but the character she’s playing remains unclear. Gerber’s mom, Cindy Crawford, was married to Richard Gere from 1991 to 1995.

Hayes Warner has also been cast in the adaptation as a series regular. The singer will play popular girl Debbie Shaffer, another student at the exclusive prep school. Deadline first reported the news on August 22.

Graham Campbell will play Bret’s best friend, Thom. The series will be his first TV role.

What is The Shards about?

The Shards takes place primarily in 1981, Bret’s senior year of high school. An older Bret recalls what happened that fateful year when he met Robert Mallory and the “Trawler” terrorized Los Angeles. Bret becomes obsessed with the serial killer who is seemingly targeting young women in the Los Angeles area. As Robert Mallory is welcomed into Bret’s friend group, Bret becomes convinced this enigmatic young man is hiding secrets.

The Shards was initially serialized by Ellis as an audiobook through his podcast before he traditionally published in 2021.

The Shards, TBA, FX

August 23, 2025 0 comments
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